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Museum Hunting?


California Lutheran University is in the perfect location where traveling to a multitude of Museums is quick and easy. Listed below is a vast selection of art experiences to help inspire and stimulate whatever creative tiff you could be feeling. Here are the names of some Museums, the address, and a link to their direct site. So go and enjoy good art. NOW!

Getty
1200 Getty Center Drive,
Los Angeles, California 90049
(310) 440-7330

The Getty

Getty Villa
17985 Pacific Coast Hwy,
Malibu, CA
(310) 440-7300

The Getty Villa

LACMA
Wilshire Blvd,
Los Angeles, CA
(323) 857-6000

LACMA

MOCA
250 South Grand Avenue,
Los Angeles, CA 90012-3007
(213) 621-1710

MOCA

Hammer
10899 Wilshire Boulevard,
Los Angeles, CA
(310) 443-7000

Hammer

Santa Barbara Museum of Art
1130 State Street,
Santa Barbara, CA
(805) 963-4364

Santa Barbara Museum of Art

Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery
4804 Hollywood Boulevard,
Los Angeles, CA
(323) 662-8139

Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery

MAK Center for Art and Architecture
835 North Kings Road,
West Hollywood, CA 90069
(323) 651-1510

MAK Center of Art and Architecture

Museum of Neon Art
136 W 4th St,
Los Angeles, CA
(213) 489-9918

Museum of Neon Art

USC Fisher Museum of Art
823 Exposition Blvd,
Los Angeles, CA 90089
(213) 740-4561

USC Fisher Museum of Art

Vincent Price Art Museum
1301 Avenida Cesar Chavez,
Monterey Park, CA 91754
(323) 265-8841

Vincent Price Art Museum

Watts Tower
1765 East 107th Street
Los Angeles, California 90002
(213) 847-4646

Watts Tower

Norton Simon Museum
411 West Colorado Boulevard
Pasadena, CA 91105
(626) 449-6840

Norton Simon Museum

Santa Monica Museum of Art
2525 Michigan Avenue
Bergamot Station, Santa Monica, CA 90404
(310) 586-6488

Santa Monicas Museum of Art

Cal State Northridge Art Galleries
18111 Nordhoff Street
Northridge, CA, 91330-8299.
(818) 677- 2226

Cal State Northridge Art Galleries

Pasadena Museum of California Art
490 East Union Street,
Pasadena, CA 91101
(626) 568-3665

Pasadena Museum of California Art

Amit Sood: Building a museum of museums on the web

amit_sood_building_a_museum_of_museums_on_the_web.html

Amit Sood, a Group Marketing Manager for Google, has created and complete to museum of the century. A site where one can virtually walk through a museum in Paris, while sitting in bed in Thousand Oaks California. The most a exciting aspect of GoogleArtProject is its high resolution viewing of any desired piece; said best by  Julian Raby, director, the Freer Gallery, Washington, DC:

“The giga-pixel experience brings us very close to the essence of the artist through detail that simply can’t be seen in the gallery itself. Far from eliminating the necessity of seeing artworks in person, Art Project deepens our desire to go in search of the real thing.”

The Directions to use the site are EASY, simply select a museum from the homepage and then either choose ‘Explore the museum’ or ‘View Artwork’. Once you are in the main site use the drop-down menus or the side info bar to navigate between artworks and museums.

Cited From:

  • http://www.ted.com/speakers/amit_sood.html

Study of the Week: REMBRANDT Van Rijn

Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn

15 July 1606 – 4 October 1669

“Rembrandt was a Dutch painter and etcher. He is generally considered one of the greatest painters and printmakers in European art history and the most important in Dutch history. His contributions to art came in a period that historians call the Dutch Golden Age. Having achieved youthful success as a portrait painter, his later years were marked by personal tragedy and financial hardships. Yet his etchings and paintings were popular throughout his lifetime, his reputation as an artist remained high, and for twenty years he taught many important Dutch painters. Rembrandt’s greatest creative triumphs are exemplified especially in his portraits of his contemporaries, self-portraits and illustrations of scenes from the Bible. His self-portraits form a unique and intimate biography, in which the artist surveyed himself without vanity and with the utmost sincerity. Rembrandt’s greatest creative triumphs are exemplified especially in his portraits of his contemporaries, In his paintings and prints he exhibited knowledge of classical iconography, which he molded to fit the requirements of his own experience; thus, the depiction of a biblical scene was informed by Rembrandt’s knowledge of the specific text, his assimilation of classical composition, and his observations of Amsterdam’s Jewish population. Because of his empathy for the human condition, he has been called one of the great prophets of civilization.”

Biography Cited from:

  • http://hoocher.com/Rembrandt/rembrandt_harmensz_van_rign.htm
  • http://rusart.ca/history/rembrandt.html

Explaining the appeal of Rembrandt paintings

A researcher at the University of British Columbia claims he has figured out why Rembrandt paintings are so appealing to viewers.

“Renaissance artists used various techniques to engage viewers, many incorporating new scientific knowledge on lighting, spatial layout and perspectives. To isolate and pinpoint factors that contribute to the “magic” of Rembrandt’s portraits, DiPaola used computer-rendering programs to recreate four of the artist’s most famous portraits from photographs of himself and other models. Replicating Rembrandt’s techniques, he placed a sharper focus on specific areas of the model’s face, such as the eyes.

Working with a team from the Vision Lab in UBC’s Dept. of Psychology, DiPaola then tracked the viewers’ eye movements while they examined the original photographs and the Rembrandt-like portraits.

“When viewing the Rembrandt-like portraits, viewers fixated on the detailed eye faster and stayed there for longer periods of time, resulting in calmer eye movements,” says DiPaola, who is also an associate professor at Simon Fraser University and adjunct faculty at UBC’s Media and Graphics Interdisciplinary Centre. “The transition from sharp to blurry edges, known as ‘lost and found edges,’ also directed the viewers eyes around the portrait in a sort of narrative.”

…”Through these techniques, Rembrandt is essentially playing tour guide to his viewers hundreds of years after his death, creating a unique narrative by guiding the viewers’ eye,” says DiPaola. “This may explain why people appreciate portraiture as an art form.

Explaining Appeal Cited From:

  • http://boingboing.net/2010/05/28/researcher-explains.html

Congratulations Finalist Ashley Bowman

A big congratulations to CLU art major Ashley Bowman for being selected as one of the finalists of the American Batik Design Competition.

The American Batik Design Competition is an open competition intended to draw from among American citizens diverse talents in fabric, graphic art and fashion design, to put on display new and original designs that allow the American spirit and values to shine through, while still recognizing uniqueness in the Batik motif. The phrase “American Batik” is a term attempting to illustrate and describe such creative designs and fashion ideas that remain influenced by typical Indonesian Batik motifs, and are bound to incorporate two criteria:

  1. they have to be designed by American designers; and
  2. they exhibit the American spirit and values, drawing from its history and folklore.

The theme of the competition is “The Spirit of America in the Heritage of Batik”. This theme is hoped to reflect the articulation of cultural fusion between United States and Indonesia through batik; to bring American values in the tradition of Indonesian Batik. This competition is aimed at strengthening people to people contacts between the United States and Indonesia, to bring closer the two countries’ cultural cooperation. It is also one of the Indonesian government’s efforts to internationalize batik to the world.

Judges will consist of Batik and textile experts as well as fashion designers and representatives of fashion industries from Indonesia and the U.S. Participants of this competition will be asked to create an ‘American batik’ digital design only. The transformation from digital designs into Batik Tulis (hand-made batik) will be later done by Indonesian batik artists in Indonesia.

You have made your family, friends, and colleagues very proud. You represent one of the many success stories an education in art at California Lutheran University will bring. All of us at CLU wish you the best of luck for the final.

Congratulations!

2011-2012 Art Department DA’s

Hello

My name is Nate Maxwell-Doherty (left) and this is Andrew Degoede (right) and we are the 2011-2012 Art Department DA’s. For the next year, we will be updating this blog with everything related to the Art Department and any artistic happenings found on the campus of California Lutheran University. Additionally, we are here to help, inform and encourage the general student body with whatever creative act they may find themselves pursuing. So please, read this blog and come on over to visit us in the foyer of the F Building. Maybe over a fine cup of earl gray tea, we can talk, walk and act out art together. Our office hours are (approx.) Monday 1:00pm-5:30pm, Wednesday 1:00pm- 5:30pm and Friday 1:00pm-5:00pm.

Cheers,

Andrew and Nate

Opening at Kwan Fong Gallery

On Friday night we opened a new show at the Kwan Fong Gallery. It is a group show of the work of the summer beginning painting students and Lindsey Brittain's work from her Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship. The work will be up for at least a week an all are invited to come out and take a look. Lindsey would particularly like you to participate in her research by filling out a short questionnaire on your response to her paintings. This data will be collected and reported at the Undergraduate Research symposium in October.

Porcelain, Paint and “Exquisite Play”

Janet Neuwalder’s fascinating work is formed using natural and industrial raw materials (branches, leaves, straw, fibers, papers) that act as armatures for clay. The process of coating, dipping, layering and firing acts as an accelerated aging and evolution process that petrifies the form and produces a “contemporary fossil.” When this marriage of process, form and fire unite, the work is encoded with the past and present, and is suggestive of its potential future.

Admission is free.

Where: The Kwan Fong Gallery, located in Soiland Humanities Center

When: January 25 – February 26, 2010

Parking: Street parking is by permit only Monday through Friday, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Visitor parking is available in the parking lots on Mountclef Boulevard north and south of Olsen Road.

Pederson statue

IMG_1170  IMG_1171Paul’s sculpture of Richard Pederson has been completely encased in layers of silicon, fibreglass and hydrocal, in that order, then the mold removed to be bolted together ready for casting. Now we’re waiting for the work to be completed, including arranging time for Paul to return to the University to work on the wax when it’s made. 

Here you can see Raphael applying the final layer of hydrocal and the green coloured fibreglass beneath it.

Pearce shows work at the Brand Gallery in Glendale

brand

Art Department Chair Dr. Michael Pearce will exhibit his work in an exhibit at the Brand Gallery in Glendale this month.

MAP

Opening Reception: Saturday, May 16, 6-9pm

Selected Curiosities showcases the work of four Los Angeles area artists working in a variety of media to create pieces that promise to pique the viewer’s curiosity. Using clay, mixed media, and digital photographic prints Monica Furmanski and Janet Neuwalder will collaborate on an installation that speaks to both the micro and macro aspects of the natural world. Their collaborative effort is based on the “use of similar imagery that investigates the poetic and complex structures of natural and industrial systems, networks, and matrices.” With nature as her starting point, Jennifer Tenace uses oil, acrylic and mixed media on panel to create lush abstract landscapes in which the mercurial aspects of process are evident. Michael Pearce will show his installation Mr. Pearce’s Cabinet of Alchemical Wonders for the first time. This installation includes many mixed media pieces and large scale paintings and reflects Pearce’s interest in the philosophy of alchemy, the base elements of air, water, fire, and earth, and humankind’s longing to understand the phenomena of the universe.

The exhibit is open from May 16th to June 19th.

Senior show pictures

There are a multitude of photographs of the installation and reception of the Senior Art exhibit shot by the wonderful Art Miller at this page. Enjoy!

The reception was a great success with a large and appreciative crowd in the gallery, entertained by a raffle, frozen yogurt, splendid art and video work by our senior students. WELL DONE!

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